Inside Nepal's Fake Rescue Racket

(kathmandupost.com)

106 points | by lode 3 hours ago

11 comments

  • delichon 32 minutes ago
    > But guides and hotel staff ... tell them they are at risk of dying, that only immediate evacuation will save them.

    I got Acute Mountain Sickness at just 11k feet. Headache, nausea, dizziness, fatigue. I passed out until hitting the ground woke me up. I was very disoriented and vulnerable. If someone had told me that I had to get to a hospital or I'd die they could have led me like a tame goat. And they could be right. If you have high-altitude cerebral or pulmonary edema it is life threatening.

    A guide getting a kickback can make it a lot more likely just by cutting short the boring acclimatization time.

  • skilled 1 hour ago
    I did the Everest base camp trek in late 2015, at that time it was quite common (saw it myself and heard about it) that people would do the trek up but to get down they would fake a leg/back injury or blame altitude sickness and the chopper from Kathmandu would come pick you up, as long as you had the right insurance.
    • WarmWash 9 minutes ago
      Surely the insurers would quickly become aware of this, I mean, there are people whose job it is to monitor all claims and adjust prices accordingly.

      So while it might feel like the insurers were getting fleeced, it was almost certainly the insured who didn't get the copter ride.

    • bombcar 1 hour ago
      I wonder how much a chopper ride would cost at "reasonable rates" (e.g, not the air ambulance but just a chopper).
      • MikeNotThePope 1 hour ago
        I can tell you exactly what it cost for me. I took the helicopter from Gorakshep, the highest/last town on the EBC trek, to Lukla, the crazy airport people call the most dangerous one in the world. For me, a 255 lb / 155kg guy, 2 Nepalis that are each half my size, a pilot, and our not-that-heavy hiking gear was 2000 USD in October of 2024.

        Pics/video: https://www.instagram.com/p/DBTpLGtydZW/

        • ddlatham 7 minutes ago
          probably mean 255 lb / 115kg
        • AndrewKemendo 25 minutes ago
          Nothing beats good quality, freshly sourced, all natural ground truth data
      • paxys 1 hour ago
        I'm assuming less than the average ambulance ride in the USA
      • doikor 1 hour ago
        Per person around $1500. Over 10k of you can’t fill the chopper.
  • tomaskafka 1 hour ago
    “Wasn’t the system supposed to be fixed?“

    Why would it be fixed? Insurance companies aren’t willing to invest in oversight, and everyone else profit, there is no incentive for changing the system.

    • datadrivenangel 1 hour ago
      Nepal is a low income and high corruption country, where the government and formal business structures are unstable enough that 'tipping' becomes common even for government investigators...

      It's basically a way for everyone to get more tourists dollars, which is one of Nepals primary exports.

    • bombcar 1 hour ago
      If the cost to an individual insurance company is low enough (in the few millions) and they're not really at risk of it suddenly exploding, and the cost for them to mitigate is also in the millions (or risks killing a customer), they're unlikely to improve. Fight Club, but the other way around.

      However, if they all gang up together they might do something - but that can cause other issues (a local insurer becomes the only insurance available, etc).

  • rdtsc 58 minutes ago
    > But none of that worked “The scam continued due to lax punitive action,”

    It percolated up. It’s usually what happens with corruption. If lower levels are found out to have a lucrative scheme, the higher ups (auditors, police, legislators) make a big fuss about stumping it publicly, but behind the scenes go and ask for a cut.

  • givemeethekeys 1 hour ago
    Sounds pretty bad until you look at the numbers.
    • RajT88 18 minutes ago
      And then it looks very bad?

      The amount of each incident is fairly low, and probably goes a long way to funding the local community.

      But the number of incidents is nuts - well over 1000 per year.

  • MikeNotThePope 1 hour ago
    To be honest I'm surprised insurance is offered at all. I did the EBC trek a couple years ago. The temptation to take a helicopter down was real & I didn't have insurance.
    • datadrivenangel 1 hour ago
      Rescue insurance was required by the trekking company when I did EBC a few years back.
  • badgersnake 15 minutes ago
    Unnecessary CT scans mean unnecessary radiation exposure. This is a direct harm to the “patient”.
  • IAmBroom 1 hour ago
    "In at least one case cited in the investigation, baking powder was mixed into food to make tourists physically unwell."

    The only ill effect I can find from overconsumption is a "tingly sensation on the tongue". Of course, that doesn't mean the 'poisoner' wasn't ignorant of this, and genuinely did it trying to make them sick. Or maybe they simply said, "If you feel your tongue tingling, YOU ARE DYING!!!".

    • ceejayoz 1 hour ago
      It’s a leavener when you get it wet, so swallowing enough will definitely feel like digestive upset from all the gas.
    • ambicapter 1 hour ago
      I feel like "make physically unwell" here just means they'll taste something gross, not realize it is the baking powder, and treat the feeling as if something is wrong with their body. I know mixing up baking soda and baking powder has made for some pretty unpleasant tasting food for me.
    • MontagFTB 1 hour ago
      Could it be a symptom of high altitude oxygen deprivation?
      • datadrivenangel 1 hour ago
        Yes, which is why it's easy to then convince people to evacuate. People do die on Everest, including EBC treks from altitude sickness alone, so severe symptoms usually lead to taking the trekking back down the mountain.
  • miltonlost 1 hour ago
    Stop pointlessly climbing mountains and ruining the natural environment. Climbing Mt Everest at this point is just a sign of conspicuous consumption and not any achievement other than financial. Would have been better to spend your money lighting it on fire.
    • datadrivenangel 56 minutes ago
      This is mostly trekking related evacuation, which is far easy and lower impact. EBC is about 100x cheaper overall per person than summit attempts, if not 500x.

      And Sagarmartha national park and the whole valley up to EBC is an amazingly beautiful part of the world.

    • simojo 15 minutes ago
      to be fair, the approach is usually covered in snowpack for most of the year, so impact is minimal by foot traffic. However, most of the protection is fixed, which could have lasting effects if something were to rip out.

      For other mountains with dry summits in the summers, I would agree: the effects of erosion are frightening

    • jopython 19 minutes ago
      The "Everest Economy" is worth around $500 million annually.
  • s5300 1 hour ago
    [dead]
  • dr_faustus 1 hour ago
    [flagged]
    • yard2010 1 hour ago
      The problem is not in this specific case (those insurance companies won't go bankrupt), but with the system. When you don't have a proper administration you can't really cooperate as effectively as with proper administration. This is the symptom, not the problem.

      Imaging the price of less cooperation - when taken to the extreme the insurance company won't accept to insure people trekking there. The price will go up. This will hurt both the industry and the trekkers.

      Proper administration > profit

    • thinkingtoilet 1 hour ago
      The article does talk about guides deliberately adding stuff to people's food to make them sick. It goes a bit beyond that.